Habitat For Native Bees Using Bee Boxes & Flowering Plants

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Hurrah for the mighty heroes of the pollinating world ~ our native bees! From tiny sweat bees to mason and leaf-cutting bees to my favorite, the docile and furry bumblebee, there is an amazing variety of species. Native bees are extremely efficient pollinators, too. Consider, for example, the 250 female orchard mason bees needed to pollinate an entire acre of apple trees compared to the many thousands of honeybees that it takes to do the same job. Amazing!

Today several of our family went to help bottle the wonderful honey coming out of our hives. It is always a treat to bring that golden near perfect food home. But it made me think about all the other bees and such that don’t make honey. They do lots of work for us, too.

Way back in the early 90s they started referring to non-honey producing bees as pollen bees. Nowadays, we call them native bees! Bumbles are particularly important pollinators for many of our domestic and wild food crops, along with many other flowering plants, because they pollinate flowers in a way that honey bees cannot.

Bumbles perform buzz pollination, in which they vibrate their flight muscles inside flowers, causing pollen to discharge and in the process improving pollination for food plants such as tomato, pepper, blueberry and cranberry ( and many more) as well as many wild flowers. Bumble bees also have fur, which picks up lots of pollen that they carry to other flowers.

I was able to capture this example of buzz pollination as a video. I had never seen this before:

Why Are Pollinators Dying?

You may have read about the devastating European honey bee declines (Colony Collapse Disorder) that threaten global agricultural interests (our food supply)! But our native pollinating bees also show large declines.

Why the sudden declines? There are many possible reasons, but habitat loss and chemicals (pesticides and herbicides) are two reasons.

The good news is that most pollinators are quite gentle when they visit flowers for nectar, and they are not likely to bother you while you hover over them with a camera.

Bees harvest nectar for carbohydrates and pollen for protein

Bee Boxes & Flowering Plants To Attract Native Bees

1.) Having a sustainable wildlife habitat is the first step, of course — one filled with a diversity of pollen- and nectar-producing flowers. Strive to provide native blooms throughout as much of the year as possible. Don’t forget about wildflowers, and consider letting friendly “weeds” such as dandelion have a place in your garden.

Some flowering plants you can install this fall (the best time to plant) are:

2.) Of course, avoid all pesticides, herbicides, and chemical fertilizers!

3.) An easy way to help our native wood nesters is to provide bee boxes in which the females can lay their eggs. Bee boxes in their simplest form are untreated wood blocks with holes drilled into them. Use a variety of hole diameters from 2mm to 10mm to benefit a range of bee species. You don’t need to buy wood — a log or untreated scrap block around the house or yard would work just fine.

Most native bees are solitary bees— rather than building a hive along with other bees. It is the female that stays focused on one job: collecting pollen for her own nest, darting from plant to plant. They then seek out a nest spot to lay their eggs. Depending on the species, this might be a cavity in a tree, a tunnel in the ground, or a rock crevice. About thirty percent of our native bees are wood-nesters, including mason, leaf-cutters, and carpenter bees.

Native bees do not fly far for their source of pollen as do honeybees, so place their nest boxes close to your garden or a food source. Food for them and pollination for you!

(source: Strumelia’s Blog~ a wonderful blog for more information on keeping mason bees)

I have not yet identified this pollinator on the aronia berry flowers this spring. It’s some kind of hover fly, I think.

The tiny, but, beautiful Metallic Green bees captured my attention when I saw them swarming all over a late blooming Russian sage last week. Their colors are dazzling. There are hundreds and thousands of species of bees. Sample.

This little green metallic bee (halictid bee) stole a ride inside one the raspberries last fall. As a good steward, I carefully collected it and transport it back outside. I love the beauty our Creator made for us to enjoy!

If you go outside on a cool day, many of these wonderful specimens will sit still for minutes instead of perpetually darting back and forth. Look for pollinators to photograph with your children; it is the beginning of a neat science study sure to interest many.

The Bumbles are social bees. Colony size is only 50 to 200 compared to thousands of honeybees. This bumble bee nesting box at Garden in the Woods in Framingham, MA, simulates the hole near or at ground level that many bumble bees prefer for nesting.

Here’s a fun fact I discovered while doing a bit of research — many native bees are attracted to the color blue! I’m already thinking about ways to get more blue in my garden.

Comments

My son loves to try to reach out and touch the furry bumble bees that frequent our hyssop. I have many of the plants you listed above. It is fun to enjoy many of God’s creatures enjoying our garden and we in turn get to enjoy their presence. Thanks for all the helpful information you included and lovely pictures! 🙂

Ohhh…loverly pictures! I must admit to attempting to pet the fuzzy bumblers myself at times! Thank you for posting on this beautiful topic. It’s such a delight to see the faithful pollinators hovering over flowers. Wish I had a better camera to take pictures of them, but it’s nice to remember, too. Hoping your day is going well, Jacqueline! It was so nice to hear from you. I’ll get back soon… =)

I love watching the native bees in my garden. They spend more time visiting the plants I plant for my honeybees than my honeybees do. It’s amazing how many different varieties there are. This would be a great post to share with my readers on my beekeeping blog hop. Check it out! http://www.beverlybees.com/beeline-buzz-hop-1/

I installed a Mason Bee House that I purchased and within a few days I saw the Bee come and fill in the holes. She must have filled 5 and then, nothing. She was gone!!!! I could not understand…..until my husband took a flashlight to find awful looking long haired gray caterpillars and some cocoons inside the holes. And we found several Earwigs inside also. When I removed the house from the stand, the back was plastered with these strange caterpillars and earwigs.
I moved the Mason House by my porch but the Bee did not come back. I got rid of all the cocoons and the caterpillars and shook the house to get the earwigs out. Now I have a desolate home that none will come close.
Where the mud plugged the hole I see a tiny round hole like if something went inside or came out but I do not see life.
I am so sad. I know how important it is to have bees!
I don’t know what to do now!
Please advise me!
Thanks
Louise

Aww…Louise, I fear it is nothing you did but that there just aren’t many bees. Do leave it up and wait. It could be a few months or a few years before another Mrs. Mason Bee comes along needing a nesting site. You are doing a wonderful thing! Don’t despair; God is still on the throne!

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Welcome! I'm Jacqueline. Thank you for stopping by. For 42 years, I have been a wife to my husband and a teacher of our children in the home. Now a new season has come, and I write this blog as an encouragement to myself and others. (Titus 2: 3-5) How important is this role of speaking into the lives of younger women! The habits of the home in one generation become the morals of society in the next. In the words of William Ross: “The hand that rocks the cradle, rules the world.” Read more »